Abstract Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cells (PEMFC) is an electrochemical device that generates electrical energy from the reactions between hydrogen and oxygen. An effective thermal management is needed to preserve… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cells (PEMFC) is an electrochemical device that generates electrical energy from the reactions between hydrogen and oxygen. An effective thermal management is needed to preserve the fuel cell performance and durability. Cooling by water is a conventional approach for PEMFC. Balance between optimal operating temperature, temperature uniformity and fast cooling response is a continuous issue in the thermal management of PEMFC. Various cooling strategies have been proposed for water-cooled PEMFC and an approach to obtain a fast cooling response was tested by feeding the coolant at a high temperature. In this paper, the operating behaviour was characterized from the perspectives of temperature profiles, mean temperature difference, and cooling response time. A 2.4 kW water-cooled PEMFC was used and the electrical load ranged from 40 A–90 A. The operating coolant temperature was set to 50 °C where the maximum stack operating temperature is 60 °C. The stack temperature profiles, cooling response time, mean temperature difference and cooling rates to the load variation was analysed. The analysis showed that the strategy allowed a fast cooling response especially at high current densities, but it also promotes a large temperature gradient across the stack.
               
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